“This time he was with a woman detective, Mrs. Jespersen, who is a lot smarter. I listened to their conversation. She went into the church and figured out everything. She guessed that I’m living there and that I’m planning to escape in the aircraft.”

“Oh, no! What did she do?”

“Went to fetch her boss, who happens to be Peter Flemming. She left Hansen on guard and told him to shoot me if I try to take off.”

“To shoot you? What are you going to do?”

“I knocked Hansen out and tied him up,” Harald said, not without a touch of pride.

“Oh, my God! Where is he now?”

“In the trunk of your father’s car.”

She found that funny. “You fiend!”

“I thought we had just one chance. Peter is on a train and she didn’t know when he would get in. If you and I could have got back to Kirstenslot tonight before Peter and Mrs. Jespersen, we could still have taken off. But now that you can’t fly. .”

“We could still do it.”

“How?”

“You can be the pilot.”

“I can’t-I’ve only had one lesson!”

“I’ll talk you through everything. Poul said you had a natural talent for it. And I could operate the control stick with my left hand some of the time.”

“Do you really mean it?”

“Yes!”

“All right.” Harald nodded solemnly. “That’s what we’ll do. Just pray for Peter’s train to be late.”

30

Hermia had spotted Peter Flemming on the ferry.

She saw him leaning on the rail, looking at the sea, and recalled a man with a ginger moustache and a smart tweed suit on the platform at Morlunde. No doubt several people from Morlunde were traveling all the way to Copenhagen, as she was, but the man looked vaguely familar. The hat and glasses put her off for a while, but eventually her memory dredged him up: Peter Flemming.

She had met him with Arne, in the happy days. The two men had been boyhood friends, she seemed to recall, then had fought when their families quarreled.

Now Peter was a cop.

As soon as she remembered that, she realized he must be following her. She felt a chill of fear like a cold wind.

She was running out of time. The full moon was three nights away, and she still had not found Harald Olufsen. If she got the film from him tonight, she was not sure how she could get it home in time. But she was not going to give up-for the sake of Arne’s memory, for the sake of Digby, and for all the airmen risking their lives to stop the Nazis.

But why had Peter not arrested her already? She was a British spy. What was he up to? Perhaps, like her, Peter was looking for Harald.

When the ferry docked, Peter followed her onto the Copenhagen train. As soon as the train got going, she walked along the corridor, and spotted him in a first class compartment.

She returned to her seat, worried. This was a very bad development. She must not lead Peter to Harald. She had to throw him off.

She had plenty of time to think about how. The train was delayed repeatedly, and got into Copenhagen at ten o’clock in the evening. By the time it pulled into the station, she had made a plan. She would go into the Tivoli Garden and lose Peter in the crowd.

As she left the train, she glanced back along the platform and saw Peter stepping down from the first class carriage.

She walked at a normal pace up the steps from the platform, through the ticket barrier and out of the station. It was dusk. The Tivoli Garden was a few steps away. She went to the main entrance and bought a ticket. “Closing at midnight,” the vendor warned her.

She had come here with Arne in the summer of 1939. It had been a festival night, and fifty thousand people had crammed into the park to watch the fireworks. Now the place was a sad version of its former self, like a black- and-white photograph of a bowl of fruit. The paths still wound charmingly between flower beds, but the fairy lights in the trees had been switched off, and the paths were illuminated by special low-intensity lamps to conform with blackout regulations. The air raid shelter outside the Pantomime Theatre added a dismal touch. Even the bands seemed muted. Most dismaying for Hermia, the crowds were not as dense, making it easier for someone to follow her.

She stopped, pretending to watch a juggler, and glanced back. She saw Peter close behind her, buying a glass of beer from a stall. How was she going to shake him off?

She moved into a crowd around an open-air stage on which an operetta was being sung. She pushed her way through to the front then out at the far side but, when she walked on, Peter was still behind her. If this went on much longer, he would realize she was trying to lose him. Then he might cut his losses and arrest her.

She began to feel frightened. She circled the lake and came to an open-air dance floor where a large orchestra was playing a fox-trot. There were at least a hundred couples dancing energetically, and many more watching. Hermia at last felt something of the atmosphere of the old Tivoli. Seeing a good-looking young man standing alone at the side, she was inspired. She went up to him and turned on her biggest smile.” Would you like to dance with me?” she said.

“Of course!” He took her in his arms and they were off. Hermia was not a good dancer, but she could get by with a competent partner. Arne had been superb, stylish and masterful. This man was confident and decisive.

“What’s your name?” he said.

She almost told him, then stopped herself at the last minute. “Agnes.”

“I am Johan.”

“I’m very happy to meet you, Johan, and you fox-trot wonderfully.” She looked back to the path and saw Peter watching the dancers.

Inconveniently, the tune came to an abrupt end. The dancers applauded the orchestra. Some couples left the floor and others came on. Hermia said, “Another dance?”

“It would be my pleasure.”

She decided to level with him. “Listen, there’s a horrid man following me and I’m trying to get away from him. Will you steer us all the way over to the far side?”

“How exciting!” He looked across the floor to the spectators. “Which one is it? That fat man with the red face?”

“No. The one in the light brown suit.”

“I see him. He’s quite handsome.”

The bank struck up a polka. “Oh, dear,” said Hermia. The polka was difficult, but she had to try.

Johan was expert enough to make it easier for her. He could also converse at the same time. “The man who is bothering you-is he a complete stranger, or someone you know?”

“I have met him before. Take me to the far end, by the orchestra-that’s right.”

“Is he your boyfriend?”

“No. I’m going to leave you in a minute, Johan. If he runs after me, will you trip him up, or something?”

“If you wish.”

“Thank you.”

“I think he is your husband.”

“Absolutely not.” They were close to the orchestra.

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